3 Estrategias de fijación de precios de de productos nuevosNew Product Pricing StrategiesThis CTR relates to the material on ppEstrategias de fijación de precios de de productos nuevosCaptura del nivel alto del mercadoPricing Innovative ProductsMarket Skimming Pricing. Market skimming pricing is the strategy of setting high initial prices to skim maximum profits from each successive layer of the target market.Penetración del mercadoPoner precio alto al producto nuevo para maximizar ganancias en el mercado meta.Menos ventas pero más redituables.Poner precio bajo al producto nuevo para atraer un gran número de compradores.Mayor participa-ción en el mercadoSkimming strategies typically set a price as high as some segments will bear. Once all customers within this segment have purchased, prices are lowered only so far as the next segment needs to be persuaded to buy. Skimming usually works well only when:Product Distinctiveness. Product quality, image, and innovation are sufficiently distinct to support a high price.Costs of Small Production Runs. The costs of producing small volume are not prohibitive.Barriers to Entry. Competitors should not be able to enter the market easily and undercut the high price.Market Penetration Pricing. Some innovations are priced low upon introduction in order to capture large market share quickly thus penetrating the market. High volume results in lower costs, which helps keep prices low. Several conditions favor penetration pricing:Price Sensitive Markets. Highly price-sensitive markets with very large volume potential so that low price produces more market growth are needed.Falling Costs. Production and distribution costs must fall as sales volume increases.Barriers to Entry. Here the low costs must generate a sustainable advantage that cannot easily be duplicated by competitors.Discussion Note: Penetration pricing may also accelerate overall market adoption rates thus supporting low price continuance that may discourage competitors from entering the market.

4 Estrategias de precios de mezcla de productosFijación de precios por línea de productoIncrementos de precio entre artículos de la líneade productos: p. ej., $299, $399Fijación de precios de producto opcionalFijar precios de productos opcionales oaccesorios que se venden junto con el producto principal: p. ej., opciones de automóvilesEstrategias de precios de mezcla de productosProduct-Mix Pricing StrategiesThis CTR corresponds to Table 11-1 on p. 331 and the relates to the material on ppFijación de precios de producto cautivoFijar precios a productos que deben usarsecon el producto principalp.ej., navajas de rasurar, película, softwareFijación de precios de subproductosFijar precio a subproductos de bajo valor para deshacerse de ellosp. ej., aserraderos, zoológicosProduct-Mix Pricing StrategiesProduct Line Pricing. Companies usually develop product lines rather than single products. In product line pricing, management must decide on the price steps to set between each product in the line. Companies often use price points to target distinctive combinations of product features and value represented by a particular price.Optional-Product Pricing. Under this strategy, the company offers a base product and prices differently for each combination of additional features or options added to the base product as desired by the customer. Automobile pricing is famous -- or infamous -- for this practice. But many manufacturers use optional-product pricing, such as personal computer makers.Captive-Product Pricing. Under this strategy, producers price products that must be used with a main product. The text describes razor blades as an example. The razor is priced low while high markups are attached to the price of the blades.Discussion Note: Students should distinguish captive pricing from optional pricing on the basis of need versus convenience. When Apple Computer prices its keyboards separately from its computers, it is practicing captive-product pricing. When it offers additional RAM beyond the included board memory, it is practicing optional-product pricing.By-Product Pricing. Waste from production and distribution may be marketable as by-products. Selling by-products allows producers to lower prices and costs on their main products. Otherwise, the prices of main products must cover the disposable or storage of by- products.Product-Bundle Pricing. This strategy combines several products and offers them at a reduced price from the cost of each product purchased separately. Season tickets and group rates are examples.Estrategias de precios de mezcla de productosPrecios de productos colectivosPoner precio a paquetes de productosp. ej., entradas de temporada, computadoras

5 Estrategias de ajuste de preciosPrice Adjustment Strategies IThis CTR corresponds to Table 11-2 on p. 334 and relates to the material on ppEstrategias de ajuste de preciosDescuento y complementoReducir precios como recompensa para clientes que, p. ej., pagan antes o promueven el producto.SegmentadaAjustar precios según las diferencias en clientes, productos o plazas.Price Adjustment StrategiesCompanies typically adjust their prices to account for various customer differences and changing situations:Descto. en efectivoClienteDiscount and Allowance Pricing. Several forms of discount and allowance pricing are used by marketers:Cash Discounts. These are price reductions to buyers who pay bills promptly.Quantity Discounts. These refer to price reductions per unit on large volumes.Functional Discounts. These are granted to channel members who perform various marketing functions.Seasonal Discounts. These are granted to buyers who purchase merchandise out of season.Allowances. These are discounts such as trade-ins for turning in old items on new purchases or promotional allowances for participating in seller sponsored advertising can also lower buyer prices.Segmented Pricing. Segmented pricing refers to pricing differences not based on costs and takes several forms:Customer-segment pricing. These target a specific segment, as in senior citizen discounts.Product-form pricing. This varies costs on versions of a product by features but not production costs.Location pricing. This stems from preferences where different locations have different perceived values, such as seating in a theater.Time pricing. This refers to price breaks given at times of lower demand.Descto. por cantidadForma de productoDescuento funcionalPlazaDescto. de temporadaTiempoComplementos

6 Estrategias de ajuste de preciosAdjustment Strategies - IIThis CTR corresponds to Table 11-2 on p. 334 and relates to the discussion on ppPsicológicaPromocionalAjustar precios para producir un efecto psicológico.El precio se usa como indicador de calidad.GeográficaPsychological Pricing. A key component in psychological pricing is the reference price consumers carry in their mind when considering sellers prices.Promotional Pricing. Promotional prices are temporary reductions below list and sometimes below costs, used to attract customers:Loss leaders. These may be offered below costs to attract attention to an entire line.Special event. This type of pricing may be used during slow seasons.Cash rebates or low financing. These “extras” may bring in customers “on the brink” and help them to decide to finally purchase.Geographical Pricing. Several forms of geographical pricing are common:FOB-Origin. Free On Board has customer pay freight.Uniform Delivered. Here the company charges the same price to all.Zone. Zone uses different areas pay different prices on freight but all customers within the same area pay the same freight charges.Basing-Point. Under this system, all customers charged freight from a specified billing location.Freight-Absorption. Here the seller pays all or part of the shipping costs to get the desired business.International Pricing. Firms may charge the same price throughout the world, especially for high-ticket, high-tech products like jetliners. Or it may offer different prices based upon differing taxes, tariffs, distribution, and promotion costs.Reducir precios temporalmentepara aumentar ventas a corto plazo.P.ej., carnadas, eventos especialesInternacionalAjustar precios considerando dóndeestán los clientes.P.ej., LAB-origen, entrega uniforme,por zonas, por punto base y porabsorción de fletes.Ajustar precios para los mercados internacionales.El precio depende de los costos, consumidores, economía, etc.

7 Cómo iniciar y responder a cambios en los preciosPrice ChangesThis CTR relates to the material on ppCómo iniciar y responder a cambios en los preciosReacciones de competido- res a cambios en los preciosIniciar recortes de preciosInitiating Price ChangesPrice changes may be initiated for several reasons, including:Price Cuts. Reasons for cutting prices may stem from overcapacity, falling market share, or attempts to dominate the market through lower costs.Price Increases. Inflation is a major source of price increases but so is the tendency to speculate on inflationary trends and raise prices beyond the rate of inflation. Over demand may also cause prices to rise. Higher prices can also increase profit margins.Buyer Reactions to Price Changes. Buyer reactions usually respond directly to price changes but not always. Usually lower prices pleases consumers, higher prices do not. But sometimes higher prices support quality improvements and lower prices mean company or product problems. Whether the buyer is correct or not in these perceptions will not immediately change their inclination to act on them.Competitor Reactions to Price Changes. Competitors most often react in industries with a small number of firms, uniform products in the market, and buyers are well informed. Competitive reactions may be similar price changes or increased non price competition. Companies should anticipate probable competitive moves prior to initiating price changes.Cambios de preciosReacciones de compradores a cambios en los preciosIniciar aumentos de precios